William Gordon | |
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Bishop of Aberdeen | |
Church |
Roman Catholic Church/ Church of Scotland |
See | Diocese of Aberdeen |
In office | 1545–1577 |
Predecessor | William Stewart |
Successor | David Cunningham |
Orders | |
Consecration | 23 December 1546 x 26 January 1547 |
Personal details | |
Born | Early 1500s Aberdeenshire) |
Died | 1577 Aberdeen |
Previous post |
Archdeacon of Caithness; Archdeacon of Dunblane; Chancellor of Moray |
William Gordon (died 1577) was a 16th-century Scottish noble and prelate, the last of the pre-Reformation bishops of Aberdeen owing allegiance to the Roman Catholic Church.
Born in Aberdeenshire, he was the son of Janet Stewart, the daughter of John Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl, and her husband Alexander Gordon, 3rd Earl of Huntly. As a youth, Gordon studied at the University of Aberdeen, the University of Paris and the University of Angers, graduating in Civil law and Canon Law.
His high aristocratic birth and educational record brought him to the attention of King James V of Scotland, who in 1537 wrote to Pope Paul III, requesting that the latter reserve benefices for Gordon. He had in fact been Archdeacon of Caithness, briefly in 1529. William Gordon was Chancellor of the diocese of Moray between 1540 and 1546, and for a short time Archdeacon of Dunblane in 1545. In either March or April 1545, Mary of Guise, the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots, wrote to the Pope requesting that Gordon be made coadjutor (designated successor) to Bishop William Stewart of Aberdeen, as the latter was suffering from bad health. Stewart in fact died on 10 April, and with the support of Governor Châtellerault, Gordon was provided to the see on 17 May, receiving consecration in either late December 1545 or early January of the following year.